Save the Trees - Please!

Like me, do you get a flood of useless pieces of paper in your daily mail? How many statements of a
company's privacy policies do you need to receive? Do any of you actually read these statements?
How many other useless pieces of paper do you receive every single day? If you are like me, these
go into the trash without being read. In addition to the ubiquitous privacy statements, how about the
various disclosure statements from credit card companies and banks. Or, consider the statement
of "Important Discount Rate Information for our Residential Customers in Massachusetts" from
my electric utility. I toss all of these without their being read.

Another example of bureaucratic paperwork gone amok is the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
In essence, this useless piece of legislation requires officers of companies to swear in writing
that they aren't cheating the public. Of course, if they do, there are reams of laws on the book
with which to prosecute them. Just look at the Enron criminal cases now in the courts.

Part of the problem with Sarbanes-Oxley is the mountain of paperwork required. This paperwork is
partly responsible for crippling firms financially. In the case of "Avant a small Massachusetts
biotech company with about $7 million in revenue]: It has to spend about $1 million a year 
or 14.2 percent of its revenue  to comply with Sarbanes-Oxley.  Avant and other companies
are spending more to hire staff, outside accountants and lawyers to help with the mountains
of paperwork and computer requirements. (Ref. 1)

It's time to stop this foolishness. We don't need to cut down trees for useless pieces of paper
that nobody reads. We don't need to waste the energy to convert wood to paper. We don't need to
have businesses incur the expenses of preparing and mailing these useless missives. We don't need to
overload our landfills with piles of paper that are of no value to anyone.

Instead, let's enact a simple law. If anyone wants to obtain a piece of information from a company
or government agency that should reasonably be available to the public, he or she can request
that information from the company or government agency and that entity is required to provide
that information, preferably via the internet, but, if requested, in writing. For the rest of us,
send me nothing except what I absolutely have to have.

We need to reward bureaucrats in government who can write laws and regulations
with the fewest number of pages and which require the least amount of paperwork for compliance.
To my legislators and all the companies that I do business with or those that hope to do
business with me, I say: "Save the Trees - Please!"